Work done per unit of time is defined as power. In the metric system, this unit is a watt. In the standard system, it is horsepower.
That is called power. In SI units, joules / seconds = watts.
The amount of work done per unit of time is power.
Work divided by distance equals force.
Power :)
" power "
-6
Power
Power is the rate of use of energy in time. The unit of Energy is joule and the unit of Power is joule/second or Watt.
I found the answer from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanical_work, which says the SI unit for work done is J (joule) or sometime Nm (newton metre)
Work done is a measure of expended energy, so the SI unit for work done is the same as for energy - the Joule.
The unit of work is the joule. One joule is the work done, or the energy used, moving a force of one newton a distance of one metre.
it is the amount of power
" power "
Work done per unit time is called power because power is work done divided by time in sec. So per unit time is seconds.
The amount of work in each unit of time is "power".
A watt is the amount of work per second.
It is power.
Work, or transfer of energy.
No. Power is the amount of work done within a unit of time. It can be thought of as Force*distance/Time.
The amount of work done divided by the time it took to do the work equals the unit rate. w/t=unit rate
Half The time. In Physiology power is the amount of work done per unit of time, obviously you are a student so think kid.
Think of "work" as the transfer of certain types of energy.
Work per unit time is power. It can be thought of as rate of doing work.
The same amount of work is done in less time.